GB2156733A - Die drawing of tubular thermoplastics - Google Patents

Die drawing of tubular thermoplastics Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2156733A
GB2156733A GB08508155A GB8508155A GB2156733A GB 2156733 A GB2156733 A GB 2156733A GB 08508155 A GB08508155 A GB 08508155A GB 8508155 A GB8508155 A GB 8508155A GB 2156733 A GB2156733 A GB 2156733A
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United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
process according
hollow workpiece
die
polymer
workpiece
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Granted
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GB08508155A
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GB2156733B (en
GB8508155D0 (en
Inventor
Ian Macmillan Ward
Alan Selwood
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National Research Development Corp UK
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National Research Development Corp UK
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Priority claimed from GB848408336A external-priority patent/GB8408336D0/en
Priority claimed from GB848421520A external-priority patent/GB8421520D0/en
Priority claimed from GB858505551A external-priority patent/GB8505551D0/en
Application filed by National Research Development Corp UK filed Critical National Research Development Corp UK
Publication of GB8508155D0 publication Critical patent/GB8508155D0/en
Publication of GB2156733A publication Critical patent/GB2156733A/en
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Publication of GB2156733B publication Critical patent/GB2156733B/en
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Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29CSHAPING OR JOINING OF PLASTICS; SHAPING OF MATERIAL IN A PLASTIC STATE, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; AFTER-TREATMENT OF THE SHAPED PRODUCTS, e.g. REPAIRING
    • B29C55/00Shaping by stretching, e.g. drawing through a die; Apparatus therefor
    • B29C55/30Drawing through a die
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29CSHAPING OR JOINING OF PLASTICS; SHAPING OF MATERIAL IN A PLASTIC STATE, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; AFTER-TREATMENT OF THE SHAPED PRODUCTS, e.g. REPAIRING
    • B29C55/00Shaping by stretching, e.g. drawing through a die; Apparatus therefor
    • B29C55/22Shaping by stretching, e.g. drawing through a die; Apparatus therefor of tubes
    • B29C55/26Shaping by stretching, e.g. drawing through a die; Apparatus therefor of tubes biaxial
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29KINDEXING SCHEME ASSOCIATED WITH SUBCLASSES B29B, B29C OR B29D, RELATING TO MOULDING MATERIALS OR TO MATERIALS FOR MOULDS, REINFORCEMENTS, FILLERS OR PREFORMED PARTS, e.g. INSERTS
    • B29K2027/00Use of polyvinylhalogenides or derivatives thereof as moulding material
    • B29K2027/12Use of polyvinylhalogenides or derivatives thereof as moulding material containing fluorine

Abstract

A process for the deformation of a hollow workpiece comprising orientable, thermoplastic polymer by passage in the solid phase through a die having both an entry side and an exit side, which process comprises providing the hollow workpiece at the entry side of the die; applying to the hollow workpiece from the exit side of the die a tension insufficient to cause tensile failure of the workpiece but sufficient to deform the hollow workpiece by drawing it with reduction in its bulk cross-sectional area in the solid phase simultaneously through the die and over an internally positioned former having a cross-sectional area greater than the initial internal cross-sectional area of the hollow workpiece; and collecting the deformed hollow workpiece from the exit side of the die.

Description

1 GB 2 156 733A 1
SPECIFICATION
Tubular materials This invention relates to tubular materials; more particularly, this invention relates to a process for the solid phase deformation of tubular materials of an orientable, thermoplastic polymer and to the oriented tubular materials so produced.
In our patent GB 2060469B we have described a process for the solid phase deformation of a workpiece of an orientable, thermoplastic polymer, which process comprises providing the workpiece of the essentially unoriented polymer at the entry side of a die; applying to the workpiece from the exit side of the die a draw tension insufficient to cause tensile failure of the workpiece; and drawing the workpiece through the die so that its plastic strain is progressively increased during start-up of the process.
This invention seeks to provide oriented tubular materials having improved mechanical properties, especially in directions other than the machine direction.
According to the present invention, there is provided a process for the deformation of a hollow workpiece comprising an orientable, thermoplastic polymer by passage in the solid phase through a die having both an entry side and an exit side, which process comprises providing the hollow workpiece at the entry side of the die; applying to the hollow workpiece from the exit side of the die a tension insufficient to cause tensile failure of the workpiece but sufficient to 20 deform the hollow workpiece by drawing it with reduction in its bulk cross-sectional area in the solid phase simultaneously through the die and over an internally positioned former having a cross-sectional area greater than the initial internal cross-sectional area of the hollow workpiece; and collecting the deformed hollow workpiece from the exit side of the die.
By "bulk cross-sectional area" of the hollow workpiece is meant the area of the bulk of the 25 workpiece substantially normal to the machine direction; by "internal cross-sectional area" of the hollow workpiece is meant the area of the hollow within the workpiece substantially normal to the machine direction. By way of example, in a tubular workpiece, the former area is 7r,(D 2 -D 2) where D(, is the outside diameter and D, is the bore of the tubular workpiece while the 0 B other area is 77,D 2 B. The process of the present invention is effected by utilising at the die and, optionally, downstream therefrom a former internally positioned within the hollow workpiece and having a cross-sectional area of at least the initial internal cross-sectional area of the hollow workpiece and, preferably, the same cross-section. Preferably the cross-sectional area of the former is greater than the initial internal cross-sectional area of the hollow workpiece and this may advantageously be provided by a former of progressively increasing cross- sectional area.
The term "hollow workpiece" as used herein includes tubes and other crosssections of hollow stock. The term includes both billets and other forms of stock of greater length; indeed, continuous stock, which may be formed as the process is performed, may be utilised. Examples include open-ended elongate workpieces of substantially constant cross- section, desirably with 40 an axis of symmetry; for example, hollow workpieces of circular, elliptical, square, rectangular or triangular cross-section.
The orientable thermoplastic polymer desirably is or becomes a semicrystalline polymer, especially one which exhibits sufficient strain hardening and strain rate dependence of the flow stress to stabilise the neck formed under the desired drawing conditions. Preferred classes of 45 such polymers are unsubstituted or mono- or poly- halo-, for example chloro- or fluoro substituted vinyl polymers, unsubstituted or hydroxy-substituted polyesters, polyamides, polyeth erketones and polyacetals. Suitable examples include a linear homo- or copolymer of ethylene or propylene with at least one comonomer; a vinyl chloride polymer, a vinyl fluoride polymer or a vinylidene fluoride polymer; PHB; PEEK; or a homo- or co-polyoxym ethylene.
The polyester is one which is derivable from the reaction of at least one polyhydric alcohol, suitably a linear polyhydric alcohol, preferably a diol, with at least one polybasic acid, suitably a polycarboxylic acid. The alcohol is preferably an alicyclic or aliphatic such alcohol; for example, cyclohexanedimethanol or a linear C, to C. alkylene diol such as ethylene glycol, 1,3-propylene glycol or 1,4-butylene glycol, especially ethylene glycol. The acid is preferably an aromatic, alicyclic or aliphatic such acid; for example a mono- or poly carbocyclic aromatic acid such as o, m-, or terephthalic acid; 2,6- or 1,5-naphthalene dicarboxylic acid; or 1, 2-dihydroxybenzoic acid, especially terephthalic acid. Examples of suitable polyesters include polyethylene 2,6 naphthalate, polyethylene 1,5-naphthalate, polytetramethylene 1,2- dihydroxybenzoate, poly ethylene terephthalate, polybutylene terephthalate and copolyesters, especially of ethylene terephthalate.
Where it is intended to utilise the die drawing process of this invention to produce a product with enhanced Young's modulus; resistance to creep; resistance to gas transport; enhanced deadfold; or enhanced axial thermal conductivity then a workpiece of a linear homo- or copolymer of ethylene should desirably comprise a polymer having a weight average molecular 65 2 GB 2 156 733A 2 weight (-M,,) less than 1,000,000, suitably from 50,000 to 500,000, preferably from 70,000 to 400,000; one of a linear homo- or copolymer of propylene should desirably comprise a polymer having a W,, from 150,000 to 800,000, preferably from 250,000 to 500,000.
However, the die drawing process of this invention may also be performed, to provide a more advantageous forming process but not the enhanced properties listed above, on a hollow workpiece of an orientable, amorphous polymer: for example polymethyl methacrylate or polystyrene; or of an orientable, semicrystalline ultra high molecular weight polymer (for example, a linear homopolymer of ethylene having a M,, about 3,000,000). It may likewise be utilised, but to a lower deformation ratio, in respect of those polymers which would otherwise give the enhanced properties lised above.
The hollow workpieces used in the process of this invention may incorporate a filler. Examples of useful fibrous fillers include glass, asbestos, metal, carbon and ceramic whiskers, such as those formed from silicon carbide. Examples of useful laminar fillers include mica, talc and graphite flakes. Chalk and fly ash may also be included. The amount of filler which may advantageously be included depends on the nature of the filler, but up to 50% by weight, preferably less than 30%, especially less than 20%, may be incorporated.
The hollow workpiece may be essentially unoriented before deformation. The term -essentially unoriented- as used herein means that the hollow workpiece has incurred no orientation other than that minor amount which might be induced during formation of the workpiece, (including orientation produced in the semi-molten state) for example during billet moulding or melt extrusion, or during any subsequent shaping thereof, for example by machining, prior to the performance of the die drawing process of this invention.
Where it is not possible to use the polymer as received as a hollow workpiece, the workpiece may be formed either in the batch or continuously. In either case care must be taken to ensure that the workpiece cools at an appropriate rate so that the resulting hollow workpiece will be 25 without defects.
In the case of a hollow workpiece formed in the batch, for example a polymer billet, the following general methods have been found to be suitable. The polymer may be melted in a screw extruder; extruded or injected into a billet mould at a temperature about 30C above its melting point and cooled under elevated pressure for 5 hours, or it may be melted in an extruder; extruded or injected into a cold billet mould; transferred to an oven for 4 hours under ambient pressure at a temperature below its melting point but above its crystallisation temperature; and thereafter allowed to cool in the oven after the heating has been switched off.
The polymer may also be injection moulded into an air or water cooled billet mould. Progressive immersion in the cooling fluid is preferred, thereby ensuring that solidification of the polymer 35 takes place from the bottom of the mould thereby preventing the formation of internal voids due to shrinkage. The hollow workpiece may be formed in the batch by including a mandrel of appropriate cross-section, usually coaxially, in the mould. Alternatively, stock of circular or other hollow cross-section may be produced continuously using one of several processes known to those skilled in the art.
As the hollow workpiece is to be drawn over a former having a crosssectional area greater than the internal cross-sectional area of the hollow workpiece a belied nose must first be formed on the hollow workpiece to permit start-up. This may be produced by rolling the hollow workpiece onto the former; inflating an elastomeric bag inside the nose region of the hollow workpiece; or drawing a conical former upstream into the nose region of the hollow workpiece.
In performance of the invention a nose formed on the hollow workpiece is advanted to protrude through the die lips and is secured to tensioning means applied from the exit side of the die. A suitable arrangement includes a hauloff comprising a pair of serrated jaws in which the nose is gripped; a high tensile cable one end of which cable is attached to the jaws, the other to a winch or a loading station to which a turning moment or mass may be applied thereby applying a draw tension to the nose. The hauloff may also comprise, instead of a cable, any tension transmitting means used in the metal drawing art including a chain, a rack and pinion mechanism, a screw mechanism and a hydraulically operated draw mechanism. The hauloff may further comprise a pair of continuous contra-rotating friction belts, generally known as a -caterpillar- (-CATERPILLAR- is a registered Trademark.) The draw tension should be sufficient to draw the hollow workpiece through the die but insufficient to cause tensile failure of the article; that is, the draw tension should be such that the true stress at any point of the product does not exceed its fracture stress at that point. A suitable maximum value of draw tension may readily be determined by routine experiment. In the case of strain hardening polymers, as the drawing progresses the flow stress of the strained 60 portions of the workpiece increases. This will permit a greater draw tension to be applied (giving an increased plastic strain). This enables greater cross-sections of workpiece, or smaller apertures of die, or both, to be utilised also giving a further increase in plastic strain. These increases further strengthen the strained polymer so that the strain can be progressively increased during start-up until a product having desired final properties (for example, Young's 65 3 GB 2 156 733A 3 modulus or cross-sectional area) is attained whereafter steady state processing conditions obtain.
After a grippable length of the hollow workpiece has been drawn through the die any unsuitably oriented part of its nose may be removed and the oriented grippable length re gripped thereby enabling a higher load to be applied.
For a particular polymer, a steady state process is obtained for a given set of temperature, 5 draw speed and deformation ratio. -Deformation ratio' as used herein is the ratio of the initial cross-sectional area of the hollow workpiece to the final cross-sectional area of the product.
These parameters vary implicitly, but it has been found possible, for a particular polymer, to set the die temperature (which will be only a nominal temperature for the polymer since the process is not an isothermal one) and the workpiece shape and vary, by experiment, the draw speed to 10 obtain the desired deformation ratio.
For linear homo- and copolymers of ethylene the hollow workpiece is desirably heated to a temperature within WC below the melting point of the polymer. More particularly, for such polymers of V. from 50,000 to 150,000, the temperature is preferably from 7WC to 1 OWC; and for such polymers of V,, above 300,000 from 7WC to 12WC. For linear homo- and copolymers of polypropylene of weight average molecular weight from 150,000 to 800,000 the hollow workpiece is desirably heated to a temperature from 2WC to 1 7WC, preferably WC to 1 WC. A temperature of WC to 1 7WC, preferably 15WC to 1 7WC is suitable for homo- or copolyoxymethylene; of WC to 165C is suitable for vinylidene fluoride polymers and of WC to 11 O'C or even WC to 1 2WC is suitable for polyester. The polymer temperature may be 20 further controlled by utilising a heated die and/or a temperature controlled chamber which extends downstream. Certain polymers may also be heated by subjecting them to a dielectric field, as disclosed in EPC 0084274 and US 3364294.
Very clear oriented, polyester material may be prepared by the process of the invention by heating an orientable thermoplastic workpiece of the polyester material to a temperature from 25 WC to 1OWC, preferably from WC to WC, at the entry side of the reducing die; and deforming the workpiece by passage through the die in the solid phase at a nominal deformation ratio of at least 2A, preferably of at least 3A.
If a measure of clarity may be sacrificed the workpiece may be heated above 105'C; for example to 11 WC or even to 11 5'C above which temperature the resulting product is both 30 cloudy and of diminished modulus.
It is feasible to use draw speeds greater than 1 cm min in the die drawing process of this invention; indeed, speeds of 50 cm min 1 or more are preferred.
A batch process may be converted to a continuous one by putting the upstream end of the deforming hollow workpiece and the downstream end of stock of the same cross-sectional both 35 in contact with a hot, stainless steel plate; removing the plate and welding the two polymer surfaces. Preferably such a weld should be at an angle of 45 or less to the axis of the stock.
Utilising the die drawing process of this invention on polymers which show adequate strain hardening and strain rate dependence of the flow stress, it is possible to obtain deformation ratios of at least 4, preferably 10 or even more.
Deformation ratios readily attainable by the process of this invention are 4:1 (PEEK); 4:1 to 6:1 (PET, PVDF and polyamide); 7:1 to 9:1 (POM); and 8:1 to 12:1 (polyolefins).
The invention will now be further described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
Figure 1 represents a schematic side elevation of the apparatus diametrically sectioned along 45 the machine direction; Figure 2 represents a detailed side elevation of the die geometry in which at least a portion of the die bore is convergent; Figure 3 represents a hoop prepared and deformed as described in the Example; Figure 4 represents a detailed side elevation of die geometry differing from that of Fig. 2 in 50 that at least a portion of the die bore is divergent; and Figure 5 represents a detailed side elevation of die geometry differing from that of Fig. 2 in that the die bore is constant.
It is observed that in each of the geometries illustrated in Figs. 2, 4 and 5 at least a portion of the die-former configuration defines a reducing cross-sectional area for the flow path of the 55 deforming hollow workpiece.
In the drawing, the apparatus consists of a reducing die 1 of 15, semiangle and maximum reduction (or ideal deformation) ratio of 2.68 and, upstream thereof, an oven 2 from which a mandrel 3 (21.8 mm diameter and 10 mm length), having tapered leading and trailing edges 4, 5, is supported by rod 6 (16 mm diameter) in the die exit 7 which is 1 cm in length and without taper. Hauloff jaws 8 are connected downstream from the reducing die to a winch (not shown).
In use, an initial hollow workpiece 9 of orientable thermoplastic polymer is machined at one end to form a nose. It is then inserted over the mandrel and rod into the oven, maintained at a temperature of 1 OWC, so that the machined end protrudes through the die exit, the die also 65 GB 2 156 733A 4 being maintained at 1 OWC. The machined end is next gripped in the hauloff jaws and load applied, slowly at first such that the plastic strain of the billet is progressively increased without causing tensile failure. After start-up a steady drawing speed at a steady drawing load is established.
The following Examples illustrate the invention.
EXAMPLE 1
An ethylene copolymer of the following specification:
0.7 -CH = CH, groups/ 1000 C atoms 10 1.4 -CH3 groups/ 1000 C atoms 91.1 205,500 M,, 18,000 V"V', 11.4 - 15 (Marlex 47100 ex Phillips; "MARLEX" is a registered Trade Mark) was melt extruded into a billet mould having an internal diameter of 3 inches at 220C; and cooled to ambient temperature under elevated pressure for 15 hours to give a void-free billet 700 mm in length.
This billet was then bored-out to 25 mm I.D. and machined externally to 63 mm O.D.; and a nose, 100 mm in length, was then machined on one end of the billet by continously increasing 20 the bore to 40 mm and continously turning down the outer surface to 52 mm O.D., the two frusto-conical surfaces so generated each having a sernivertical angle of 7% The hollow billet so formed was next incorporated into the aforementioned apparatus and heated to 1 00C.
After being left for at least 2 hours in the apparatus at the temperature of 1 00C in order to attain thermal equilibrium, the protruding nose of the billet was gripped by a clamp at the exit side of the die and the billet, at an initial temperature of 1 00t, was drawn through the die at a speed of 10 mm min -I at a tension of about 400 kg wt until sufficient oriented polymer appeared to enable repositioning of the clamp whereupon this process was repeated until drawn material from the bulk of the billet appeared at the exit side of the die. After a final repositioning of the clamp drawing was recommenced at a draw speed of 190 mm min -I at a tension of 1400 kg wt until substantially all of the billet has been drawn to given an oriented ethylene copolymer tube of 40.5 mm O.D. and 32.2. mm I.D. and having an actual deformation ratio of 5.5.
mm lengths were cut from the tube to provide hoops; it was found that they could be deformed in a vice in a direction at right angles to the machine direction to a substantial strain 35 in which the vice jaws were only 24 mm apart before fracture of the hoops occured. Even on fracture the hoops remained intact, the cracks not having propagated to the internal surfaces of the hoops.
If a portion of a hoop is deformed instead by application of a net force away from the centre of curvature of the hoop the internal surface of the hoop does not fracture but, rather, undergoes plastic flow.
A more quantitative test is now described which was effected to demonstrate the enhanced ductility of the tubes produced in accordance with the present invention.
A soft rubber bung was inserted into a length of the tube prepared as aforesaid. The bung was then compressed by two pistons mounted to be contra-axially and internally slidable in the 45 tube. A circumferential scale measured the maximum change in girth of the tube prior to rupture. The force applied to the pistons was a measure of the rupture stress generated.
It was found that the tube expanded in girth by 4.6% before breaking at a rupture stress of MPa. A comparison tube of the same polymer prepared as disclosed in GB 2060469B expanded in girth by 1.3% before breaking at a rupture stress of 26 MPa. It will be seen, therefore, that the tube of the present invention exhibited a nearly threefold increase in ductility over the tube prepared as disclosed in GB 2060469B.
EXAMPLE 2
A length of clear tube of isotropic, amorphous polyethylene terephthalate of 18.5 mm I.D. and 25 mm O.D. (as received ex AKZO) was pre-treated, prior to drawing, in the following way. The tube was mounted as a bung to a high pressure air line. The central portion of the tube was then heated inside a mould by pouring water at 95C thereover and, while hot, expanded by admitting air into the tube at 100 p.s.i. With the air pressure maintained the tube was quenched by immersion in a water bath at ambient temperature. The air pressure was next released and the bubble so formed was sawn through at its equator to provide two bell-ended tubular billets.
The billet so formed was then incorporated into the aforementioned apparatus in which the mandrel and die tooling was that shown in Fig. 4 of the accompanying drawings and wherein the frusto-conical portion of the mandrel has a 15' semi-angle expanding from a 18 mm 65 GB 2 156 733A 5 diameter to a 35 mm diameter while the die has a semi-angle of approximately 13% The billet was heated to 75C and maintained for 1 hour at that temperature in order to attain thermal equilibrium.
At low drawing speeds (typically 1 cm min-') noisy stick-slip occurred and the resulting tube had a irregular, rather thick (1.2 mm) wall of 36 mm O.D. However, with higher drawing speeds stick-slip disappeared: at a drawing speed of 30 cm min-' a clear, smooth tube was produced with a 27 mm O.D. If the drawn product was quenched as it left the mandrel it was found that the tube retained a higher O.D; for example, at a drawing speed of 65 cm min clear, smooth tube of 33 mm O.D. and a wall thickness of 0.5 mm was produced.
The drawn product was qualitatively assessed to be very tough and creaseproof. Further 10 drawing of strips cut in the machine direction was not possible at ambient temperature. Circumferential strips could, however, be drawn by approximately 100%.
EXAMPLE 3
A length of unplasticised PVC thick walled tube of 32 mm LID. and 42 mm O. D. (Polyorc BS 15 3505 CL7 ex ICI) was pre-treated, prior to drawing, in the following way.
A bell-end was formed at one end of the tube by pulling a metal tapernosed cylinder of the following configuration: cylindrical nose 32 mm diameter, 30 mm long; then a cone of 15, SVA leading to a cylindrical body of 59 mm, 70 mm long, heated to 150C, into it. The tube was originally at room temperature but the end to be deformed received heat from the hot cylinder. 20 This softened the tube and allowed the tapered cylinder to be drawn into the tube along a length of 15 cm, thereby expanding the end. The tube was then cooled with the taper in place, after which the taper was removed. (The operation was made easier both by greasing the taper and also by chamfering the leading edge of the tube.) The bell-ended billet so formed was next heated in an oven to WC and drawn through the 25 mandrel and die tooling shown in Fig. 5 of the accompanying drawings and maintained at the same temperature.
The dimensions of the die were: Length 60 mm; Bore diameter 42 mm.
The dimensions of the mandrel were:
Cylindrical neck 32 mm diameter, 60 mm long; Conical expanding zone 15' SVA leading to; a short cylindrical section 5 mm long, 58 mm diameter. The mandrel was fitted so that its neck was coaxially within the die and the conically expanded part was substantially outside the die and downstream therefrom but held in position so that a constriction was formed between the downstream end of the die and the upstream end of the expanding cone of the mandrel. The constriction reduced, the tube wall thickness at this 35 point from 5.0 mm to 3.7 mm regulating and controlling the flow of the deforming PVC tube.
The mandrel was provided with a hole for a cartridge heater. This heater brought the temperature of the mandrel to WC prior to start up, when it was removed. A soak time of 1 -2 hours was allowed for the billet, oven and mandrel to attain equilibrium. The inside of the billet was lightly lubricated with grease.
The expanded end of the billet was then grasped and the billet drawn at a speed of 70 cm/min, the draw force being 350 kg.
The resulting product was a shiny uniform, tough tube. 61 mm outside diameter; 55 mm bore diameter.
This corresponds to a hoopwise expansion of 1.6X and a lengthwise extension of 1.05X.
In accordance with a further aspect of this invention, a deformed hollow workpiece of this invention may be further fabricated, for example by slitting and/or rolling into sheet stock.

Claims (26)

1. A process for the deformation of a hollow workpiece comprising an orientable, thermo- 50 plastic polymer by passage in the solid phase through a die having both an entry side and an exit side, which process comprises providing the hollow workpiece at the entry side of the die; applying to the hollow workpiece from the exit side of the die a tension insufficient to cause tensile failure of the workpiece but sufficient to deform the hollow workpiece by drawing it with reduction in its bulk cross-sectional area in the solid phase simultaneously through the die and 55 over an internally positioned former having a cross-sectional area greater than the initial internal cross-sectional area of the hollow workpiece; and collecting the deformed hollow workpiece from the exit side of the die.
2. A process according to Claim 1 wherein the polymer comprising the hollow workpiece is a semicrystalline polymer.
3. A process according to Claim 2 wherein the polymer is an unsubstituted or mono- or poly halo-substituted vinyl polymer, unsubstituted or hydroxy-substituted polyester, a polyamide or a polyacetal.
4. A process according to Claim 3 wherein the polymer is a linear homo-or copolymer of ethylene or propylene with at least on comonomer.
6 GB 2 156 733A 6
5. A process according to Claim 4 wherein the polymer is a linear homo- or copolymer of ethylene of MwIrom 50,000 to 500,000.
6. A process according to Claim 5 wherein the hollow workpiece is heated to a temperature within 60T below the melting point of the polymer.
7. A process according to Claim 4 wherein the polymer is a linear homo- or copolymer of 5 propylene of M, from 150,000 to 800,000.
8. A process according to Claim 7 wherein the hollow workpiece is heated to a temperature from 20T to 170T.
9. A process according to Claim 3 wherein the polymer is a polyoxymethylene.
10. A process according to Claim 9 wherein the hollow workpiece is heated to a temperature 10 from 80T to 170T.
11. A process according to Claim 3 wherein the polymer is a vinylidene fluoride polymer.
12. A process according to Claim 11 wherein the hollow workpiece is heated to a temperature from WC to 165T.
13. A process according to Claim 3 wherein the polymer is a polyester.
14. A process according to Claim 13 wherein the hollow workpiece is heated to a temperature from 55C to 120C.
15. A process according to any preceding claim wherein the hollow workpiece comprises a filler.
16. A process according to any preceding claim wherein the hollow workpiece is essentially 20 unoriented before deformation.
17. A process according to any preceding claim wherein the hollow workpiece is an openended elongate workpiece of substantially constant cross-section.
18. A process according to Claim 17 wherein the hollow workpiece has an axis of symmetry.
19. A process according to Claim 18 wherein the hollow workpiece has a circular, elliptical, square, rectangular or triangular cross-section.
20. A process according to any preceding claim wherein at the die and, optionally, downstream therefrom there is positioned within the hollow workpiece a former having a cross- sectional area of at least the initial internal cross-sectional area of the hollow workpiece.
21. A process according to any preceding claim wherein the die is heated.
22. A process according to any preceding claim wherein the oriented thermoplastic material passes through a heated chamber downstream from the die.
23. A process according to any preceding claim wherein the hollow workpiece is drawn through the die in the solid phase at a nominal deformation ratio of at least 3:1.
24. A process according to Claim 23 wherein the draw speed is greater than 50 cm min
25. A process according to Claim 23 or 24 which is continuous.
26. A toughened oriented polymer material prepared by the process of any preceding claim.
Printed in the United Kingdom for Her Majestys Stationery Office, Dd 8818935, 1985, 4235. Published at The Patent Office. 25 Southampton Buildings. London. WC2A 'I AY, from which copies may be obtained.
GB08508155A 1984-03-30 1985-03-28 Die drawing of tubular thermoplastics Expired GB2156733B (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB848408336A GB8408336D0 (en) 1984-03-30 1984-03-30 Tubular materials
GB848421520A GB8421520D0 (en) 1984-08-24 1984-08-24 Tubular materials
GB858505551A GB8505551D0 (en) 1985-03-05 1985-03-05 Tubular materials

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GB8508155D0 GB8508155D0 (en) 1985-05-01
GB2156733A true GB2156733A (en) 1985-10-16
GB2156733B GB2156733B (en) 1987-10-28

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AU (1) AU571668B2 (en)
CA (1) CA1252265A (en)
DE (1) DE3582744D1 (en)
GB (1) GB2156733B (en)

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US5449745A (en) * 1993-06-01 1995-09-12 Howmedica Inc. Non-oxidizing polymeric medical implant
EP0774339A1 (en) 1995-11-02 1997-05-21 Howmedica International Inc. Method of improving the wear quality of ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene
US6800670B2 (en) 1996-07-09 2004-10-05 Orthopaedic Hospital Crosslinking of polyethylene for low wear using radiation and thermal treatments
US7517919B2 (en) 2002-06-06 2009-04-14 Howmedica Osteonics Corp. Sequentially cross-linked polyethylene
GB2512016A (en) * 2012-09-24 2014-09-24 Arterius Ltd Methods

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GB2156733B (en) 1987-10-28
EP0157601A2 (en) 1985-10-09
CA1252265A (en) 1989-04-11
DE3582744D1 (en) 1991-06-13
EP0157601A3 (en) 1987-06-03
AU4070285A (en) 1985-10-03
EP0157601B1 (en) 1991-05-08
US4801419A (en) 1989-01-31
AU571668B2 (en) 1988-04-21
GB8508155D0 (en) 1985-05-01

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